Several Massachusetts Democrats are still calling for impeaching President Donald Trump in the wake of special counsel Robert Mueller’s testimony before Congress on Wednesday, but their public comments were muted when it came to Mueller.

“These Democrats owe President Trump an apology, as today’s hearings were a disaster for them,” said Jim Lyons, chairman of the Massachusetts Republican Party, in a written statement Wednesday, July 24. “The collusion narrative has collapsed spectacularly, and these members of our Massachusetts Congressional delegation are refusing to admit it.”

Lyons also said he looks forward to the results of a U.S. Department of Justice investigation of the origin of the Mueller investigation, which defenders of the president say was hatched by Trump’s domestic enemies working with his foreign enemies, including former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele.

“The collusion narrative will boomerang back to the Democrats, who in fact worked with foreign operatives such as Christopher Steele,” Lyons said in the written statement. “I look forward to seeing how our all-Democratic Massachusetts Congressional delegation responds when those findings are released.”

Six of the nine members of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts voted last week to keep impeachment proceedings alive.

Below is a sample of Twitter statements Wednesday, July 24 — the day of Mueller’s testimony — from Massachusetts Democrats who last week voted to keep impeachment proeedings moving forward. None of the six used video clips from Mueller’s testimony in their tweets.

Clark, who a vice chairman of the House Democratic Caucus is a member of the House Democrats’ leadership, brought attention to Russian activities and Trump’s reactions about it, but didn’t say much about Mueller:

Kennedy had little to say about Mueller’s testimony, focusing instead on his written report:

In Robert Mueller’s own words, there is substantial evidence that the President obstructed justice. It’s there in the report for everyone to see. The Special Counsel did his job. Now it’s time for Congress to do ours. pic.twitter.com/wG9626v7Ib